The rental revolution is crushing the poor but also the middle class: 43 million households in rentals, up 9 million from 2005 creating largest 10-year increase in history.

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The rental revolution is crushing the poor but also the middle class: 43 million households in rentals, up 9 million from 2005 creating largest 10-year increase in history.

housing

The house humping pundits lock into anecdotal evidence and ignore larger changes in the housing market. For example, many kept harping on the fact that the Fed would never raise interest rates.

Well here we are, with the first rate increase in many years. Many also claimed we were going to have a flood of Millennials buying homes but that also never materialized.

The only thing they are focused on is price and that is being driven by big money, foreign investors, and people stretching their budgets to the max making their wallets burst at the seams. The housing calculus overall is not good for most Americans. We have gained nearly 9 million rental households since 2005, the largest 10-year increase in history.

At the same time, we have 8 million people that lost their home through foreclosure since 2004. Of these foreclosures 1 million happened in California, the perpetually sunny state. This seems to go against the notion that buying at any price makes sense. The reality is, we are undergoing a major rental revolution across the United States and a comprehensive Harvard study arrives at the same conclusion.
Renting instead of owning
It might be useful to add some color before diving into the study:
“The decade-long surge in rental demand is unprecedented. In mid-2015, 43 million families and individuals lived in rental housing, up nearly 9 million from 2005—the largest gain in any 10-year period on record.

In addition, the share of all US households that rent rose from 31 percent to 37 percent, its highest level since the mid-1960s.
A number of factors have fueled soaring demand. The bursting of the housing bubble played an important role, with nearly 8 million homes lost to foreclosure since the homeownership rate peaked in 2004.

Household incomes have also fallen back to 1995 levels and access to mortgage credit has tightened, making the transition to homeownership more difficult for many who might otherwise buy homes.”
I would add that mortgages are still easy to get if you have the income. The only thing that got “tightened” is the toxic junk mortgages but even those are making a slight comeback. This is not a minor change or a slight deviation from the norm. This is a big structural change in how people look at housing. The growth in rental households is so dramatic it has shifted our homeownership rate dramatically:…..more here

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